
Adriana Cândido da Silva
Possui Mestrado em Filosofia (linha: Ontologia, Mente e Metapsicologia freudiana) pela Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina (UFSC), Especialização em Psicologia Clínica: Abordagem Psicanalítica pela Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Paraná (PUC/PR) e Graduação com mérito acadêmico em Psicologia pela Universidade do Sul de Santa Catarina (UNISUL). Atualmente é Coordenadora do curso de graduação em Psicologia do Instituto de Ensino Superior de Grande Florianópolis (IES), vinculado à Universidade Paulista (UNIP), onde também é professora adjunta nas disciplinas de Teoria Psicanalítica I, Desdobramentos da Teoria Psicanalítica, Técnicas de Investigação da Personalidade e Psicopatologia Geral. Também é a Responsável Técnica da Clínica de Psicologia Aplicada (CPA) da Instituição IES. É presidente do Núcleo Docente Estruturante (NDE) e presidente do Colegiado do Curso de Psicologia do IES. É professora convidada do curso de formação em Psicanálise promovido pela UsinaDizer em Florianópolis. Atua como psicanalista e supervisora clínica em consultório particular. Tem interesse na área de docência de nível superior, psicanálise, principalmente epistemologia, ontologia, filosofia da psicanálise, clínica psicanalítica, fundamentos da teoria psicanalítica.
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Books by Adriana Cândido da Silva
journey through Sigmund Freud’s written texts, the way the concept of
hysteria influenced the development of the concept of fantasy. At first,
we examined the concept of hysteria as an essential component in the
process of creation of psychoanalysis, with emphasis on the immersion of Freud in the universe of hysterical patients under the influence of JeanMartin Charcot. We examine carefully to understand how much did Freud manage to transcend the ideas advocated by Charcot, and to highlight the Freudian theoretic démarche. In this sense, we analyze texts of the book Studies on Hysteria, in which we detect his efforts to clarify aspects of hysteria; we analyze also the influence of Josef Breuer, especially in respect of the use of the cathartic method. We intend to demonstrate how this method, whose scope was to investigate the genesis of symptoms, made possible Freud’s use of listening in therapy; however, Freud found out limitations of such method when conjugated to practice, and from that devised the fundamental rule of psychoanalysis – free association – by which he recorded his originality. In addition, with the publication of The Interpretation of Dreams, an essential theoretical milestone was established leading Freud to introduce his concept of fantasy by means of his first topic. From this point and from the important example of hysterical neurosis in Dora’s Case, Freud found out, through the analysis of dreams and symptoms, the underlying fantasies in the compromise formation. Thus, there was a very important theoretical development enabling Freud to associate fantasy with literature, repression, dream, delirious, desire, sexuality and finally, with hysteria, from which he could formulate the hypothesis on the essential importance of hysteria in the development and elaboration of the concept of fantasy. Therefore, the symptoms, as well as the hysterical attack, can be better described as a kind of fantasy manifested in one’s body.
Keywords: Hysteria. Fantasy. Psychoanalysis. Epistemology
journey through Sigmund Freud’s written texts, the way the concept of
hysteria influenced the development of the concept of fantasy. At first,
we examined the concept of hysteria as an essential component in the
process of creation of psychoanalysis, with emphasis on the immersion of Freud in the universe of hysterical patients under the influence of JeanMartin Charcot. We examine carefully to understand how much did Freud manage to transcend the ideas advocated by Charcot, and to highlight the Freudian theoretic démarche. In this sense, we analyze texts of the book Studies on Hysteria, in which we detect his efforts to clarify aspects of hysteria; we analyze also the influence of Josef Breuer, especially in respect of the use of the cathartic method. We intend to demonstrate how this method, whose scope was to investigate the genesis of symptoms, made possible Freud’s use of listening in therapy; however, Freud found out limitations of such method when conjugated to practice, and from that devised the fundamental rule of psychoanalysis – free association – by which he recorded his originality. In addition, with the publication of The Interpretation of Dreams, an essential theoretical milestone was established leading Freud to introduce his concept of fantasy by means of his first topic. From this point and from the important example of hysterical neurosis in Dora’s Case, Freud found out, through the analysis of dreams and symptoms, the underlying fantasies in the compromise formation. Thus, there was a very important theoretical development enabling Freud to associate fantasy with literature, repression, dream, delirious, desire, sexuality and finally, with hysteria, from which he could formulate the hypothesis on the essential importance of hysteria in the development and elaboration of the concept of fantasy. Therefore, the symptoms, as well as the hysterical attack, can be better described as a kind of fantasy manifested in one’s body.
Keywords: Hysteria. Fantasy. Psychoanalysis. Epistemology